by sonex1374 » Sat Sep 16, 2017 9:19 am
Peter,
Is the crowbar activating? If it is, it's creating a dead short thru the crowbar module to ground, causing a massive rush of current thru the circuit breaker. This trips the breaker (the sole reason that breaker is even there), and the breaker tripping causes the regulator to disconnect from the bus. The warning light is there to help understand the state of the system, but the first thing in troubleshooting it to answer what/how the system is working.
A few questions first. When you turn on the master switch does the circuit breaker immediately trip? If it does trip, what happens if you manually reset the breaker? The light should only illuminate when the breaker trips, or does it light at other times? This will tell us if the light is properly indicating the state of the system.
Once you determine this part, the next step would be to disconnect the regulator output and see if the light comes on at all. You'll need to charge up your battery and go fly for a bit, again with the regulator output disconnected. Keep it under 30 min and your battery will be fine for this. If the system doesn't activate, it's likely it's working properly and when it is activating it's because the regulator output is too high of voltage.
At this point, it's merely a matter of figuring out why the regulator output is too high, and this could be due to poor grounding or an internally failed regulator that's not properly limiting the output voltage.
Keep in mind that if your regulator failed in a different way it wouldn't output anything at all (rather than a too-high voltage), but that won't trip the over voltage system.... your battery would just never stay charged.
Another possibility is that the light itself is failed, but not in the "burned out" sort of failed. The light is probably wired across the circuit breaker such that when the breaker is open the light illuminates. A short to ground on one wire of the light would cause it to light up all the time regardless of what the circuit breaker was doing. Look for chafing or strange contact in the wire leads to the light or maybe the light body itself (like accidentally grounding itself to the panel where it's mounted).
The final thing is that the circuit breaker could be failed internally and is permanently open inside, despite what it looks like on the outside. This can easily be checked with a multimeter across the two leads.
Try these things out and see if you can uncover the problem.
Jeff